TIME GENDER and EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT T

TIME GENDER and EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT T

POST-SECONDARYASPIRATIONS POST-SECONDARYASPIRATIONS IN I-IPSTATENEW YORK. 1944-1994: TIME GENDER AND EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT Kelly J. Brown Geography,S.U.N.Y. Geneseo Geneseo.NY 14454 ABSTRACT: Much can be discerned through studying the entries of graduating seniors in their 'goals' yearbooks. It is the sectionthat standsas a social barometerthat accuratelymeasures aspirations and their context. This paper derives measuresof shifting aspirationsthrough time through a context analysisof all yearbook autobiographicalentries for Cato-MeridianHigh School, NY, between l9M and 1994. Entries are categorized into a typology of nine dimensions of personal aspiration. Relative emphasisof these dimensionsis shown to have shifted markedly through time and to have often varied by gender too. Further researchwill explore rural-suburbandifferences in patternsof aspiration. Recall the day that you had to decide how to profile yourself in your high school year book the year you graduated. What did you say about yourself? Did you want to get married right away, go to college or immediately enter the work force. Perhapsyou wanted a nice car, or be successful. Did you want to spend your days growing beautiful flowers? Maybe you just didn't know. This researchreviews the goals and aspirationsof over one thousandseniors in a small, rural upstate New York high school. The record of their hopes spansa period of immense social change in America. It begins in l9M and endshalf a century later in 1994,covering 19 yearsfor which usablehigh school year books were available. The technique employed in this researchis content analysis, which typically converts non- numerical sourcesof evidence into numerical form. Such sourcesmight include text, pictures, buying records, music, etc. The procedurealways begins by systematicallydefining meaningful categoriesof content. In this research,the challenge was to distill the fragmentarytext, which accompaniedstudent photographs,into a few meaningful content categories. After examining a range of yearbooksfor Cato- Meridian High School, nine categoriesof aspiration seemedto embracewhat the students said about themselves. These were as follows: geographicalpush ("I want to get out of Cato."), geographicalpull ("I want to go to Europe."), marital ("I want to get married."), educational("I want to go to college."), vocational("I want to get a job."), material("I want to makea lot of money."),philosophical ("I want to be happy."), recreational("I want to read 3 books a week."), and vague ("I want to be the king of an undergroundworld.") The incidence of each categorywas countedfor each year's study. Each year was broken down by gender and also by whether studentsintended to pursue further education. It was not possible to reliably establish educationalintent prior to 1987. Thus, content category counts were made for four subgroups for each year after 1986 and two subgroups,male and female between 1944 and 1961. Unfortnnately, no usable data were availablebetween 1962 to 1986. The data were entered in a minitab file by year and subgroup, with the totals of the nine separate categories for every subgroup. The following results were obtained by cross tabulating the data. t75 MIDDLE STATES GEOGRAPHER - VOL. 28. 1995 First asked was whether there was any evidence that aspirationsdiffered by gender. In some respects,there was little or no difference. For example, close to two thirds of men and women alike expressedvocational goals. Almost one fifth expressedmaterial aspirations. Dissatisfactionwith Cato and the lure of other placeswas about the samefor men and women. In other respects,differences were more marked. Men were much more likely than women to cite recreationalgoals. "I They would say, in most cases, want to play college football." Women on the other hand, were more than twice as likely to mention marital plans and more likely to expresstheir philosophyof life in the future. Women wanred "to "to be happy." Men wanted be successful." Period specific changespartly reflect changing yearbook format and partly echo real social and economic change. Before the mid 1950's,almost all statedaspirations were vocational. It seems,though, that it was the convention of the times to only mention what you wanted to do, and in any case,almost no one went to college then. In the late 1950s vocational intent still dominated,but all content categorieswere represented. It is striking however, that geographicalpush and pull factors,although sometimis expressed,were none the less very rare indeed. In the late 1950's,commercial farming was still viable and profitable in Cato and the region had not yet been drawn into the orbit of metropolitan Syracuse. Thus the aspirations remain those of isolation. The picture had changeddramatically by 1987. Vocational aspirations,though still common, had diminished in intensity. Toward the close of the ReaganlBushera, material aspirations were very common, and had increasedten fold in relative occurrencesince 1961. Higher educationhad become a viable dream for close to 3OVoof the students. Yet still more than 20Vo emphasizedmarital plans. Many of the studentsfelt more free to expresstheir philosophy of life than had beenthe casein the late 1950's. Finally, some were feeling the pull of distant placesand said so. The recent past has seenfurther changessuggestive of underlying social currents. For example, as the Clinton era unfolded, and recessionreigned, material aspirationsperceptibly faded in the students' self profiles' A more philosophicaloutlook tendedto characterizetheir writing. In other aspects,changes were slight. This was particularly true of the students'educational plans. Noteworthy is the still g.o*ing urge to get out of Cato even though the grass seemsto have become less green on the other side than it used to be in the students' minds. In a final analysis,I examined recent (1987 to 1994) aspirationsof the students,depending on whether they go to college or not. The resultsare not clear cut and warrant some specific eiplanattns. The recreational emphasisamong college bound studentsseems surprisingly high, but for men recreational "I and educationalgoals often tend to be one and the same. For example: want to play college football." Among the terminal school leavers,materialism tends to be more hopeful than realistic. philosophy is more inarticulate than self assuredand certainly more vague. The higher incidence of marital intent among those bound for college seemssurprising at first, but then again college goers were more likely "I to be female anyway, who were more likely to write about a great variety of things. want to go t; college so I can get a good job, make lots of money, get married and have 12 kids." Finally it islery evident that the college goers know where they want to go, where as the school leaversjust want to get out. Further researchwill seek to comparethese findings with other New York State settings. Cato is likely to present a considerable contrast to settings which are less isolated, are more affluent and which have generally higher levels of educational attainment among parents and even grandparents. I plan to continue this research with a comparative focus studying student aspirations in a suburban high school district and hope to study Brighton High School in suburban Rochester as an ideal comparative setting. 1_76 POST-SECONDARY ASPIRATIONS When you next dig out your own high schoolyearbooks, from the attic or the basement,ask how your aspirationsand those of your peers paralleled or perhapswere in sharp contrast to the hopes and plans of those thousandhigh school leaversin Cato-Meridian,New York. ASPIRATION CONTENT CATEGORIES 1. GEOGRAPHTCALPUSH (WANT TO LEAVE) 2. GEOGRAPHICALPULL (PARTICULARDESTINATION IN MIND) 3, MARITAL INTENT 4. EDUCATIONAL PLANS 5. VOCATIONAL INTENT 6. MATERIAL GOALS 7. PHILOSOPHICALSTANCE 8. RECREATIONAL PREFERENCE 9. VAGUE STATEMENTS TABLE1. GENDER.BASEDDIFFERENCES IN EMPHASIS,1944-1994, PERCENT OF YEABBOOKENTRIES push ru.ll marital educational vocational material philosophical recreational vaque male 2.6 2.9 8.7 15.2 61.0 21.6 21.4 6.1 4.4 541 female 2.4 3.5 9.2 22.2 68.2 18.1 28.8 1.3 3.0 541 Source:Cato-Meridian Hiqh School Yearbooks: 1944-1994. TABLE2. DIFFERENCEOF EMPHASISBY PERIOD,1944-1994 push pCI marital educational vocational material philosoohical recreational vaoue 1944 - 0.7 88.9 - 5.2 3.0 0.7 to 1952 n = 135 1955 0.9 0.6 6.7 6.4 71.6 3.4 7.0 2.7 3.7 to'1961 p=328 1987 2.9 6.1 22.O 28.3 58.9 38.9 35.0 6.7 5.1 to 1990 n=314 1991 4.9 4.6 19.7 29.8 52.1 26.9 43.3 3.0 3.6 to 1994 n-305 Source:Cato-Meridian High SchoolYearbooks: 1944-1994. L77 MIDDLE STATESGEOGRAPHER - VOL. 28. 1995 TABLE 3. DIFFERENCESOF EMPHASIS: GROUPSBASED ON STATED OR L]NSTATEDFURTHER EDUCATIONAL INTENT, 1981-1994 GRADUATES (PERCENT INCIDENCE) push dl marital vocational !S4!Cri4l philosophical recreational vague educationmentioned 1.1 8.9 25.0 57.9 zg.4 35.0 10.0 r.7 (n=I 80) educationnot mentioned 5.0 3.9 r9.l 54.i 34.4 40.g 2.1 5.5 (n=439) Source:Cato-Meridian High SchoolYearbooks: l9B7-1994. 1-78 POST-SECONDARY ASPIRATIONS NATTVE AMERICANS IN FILM: AN IMAGE CREATED, AN IMAGE R-EMEMBERED Michelle Calvarese Departmentof Geography West ChesterUniversity West Chester.PA 19383 ABSTRACT: Film is an effective medium within societyfor communicatingthoughts, visions, fantasies, and images. For decadesit has been an acceptablemeans of pure entertainmentwith little or no concern toward what messagesit may be unconsciouslysending. If the image evoked proved positive then film has not only entertainedus, but also enlightenedus. But far too often what we seeis either exaggerated, biased,stereotypical, or inaccurate. This is when film becomesdamaging for it formulates an i-ug" on screenbuilt out of ignorancethat may be retainedin the mind of the viewer as trutn. "ignorant This imaging" poses a genuine threat and is of utmost concern for films involving Native Americans.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    11 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us